You are here

Lance Armstrong, the disgraced US cyclist stripped of his seven Tour de France titles last year, will breaks his silence on the doping allegations that destroyed his career in a “no-holds-barred" interview with chat show host Oprah Winfrey.

Any confession would be welcomed by Sunday Times publisher News International, which reached an out-of-court settlement understood to have cost around £600,000 in 2006 over an article linking Armstrong with allegations of doping.

In October the UCI, McQuaid and Verbruggen announced they were suspending a defamation action against Kimmage pending the results of an independent report, only for the former pro-cyclist to launch legal proceedings of his own.

A statement on oprah.com described the interview as "no-holds-barred" and said it would address "years of accusations of cheating, and charges of lying about the use of performance-enhancing drugs throughout his storied cycling career”.

Despite a mass of evidence indicating Armstrong’s use of performance-enhancing drugs and blood transfusions, the cyclist has consistently denied any wrongdoing.

The NYT report last Friday quoted several unnamed sources suggesting Armstrong could now admit to doping offences in a bid to “restore his eligibility so he can resume his athletic career”.

While backers of Armstrong’s Livestrong charity were said to have put pressure on Armstrong to confess, the NYT noted that “several legal cases stand in the way of a confession”, including the case being pursued by News International.

Latest news

The head of the Crown Prosecution Service faced criticism in Parliament this afternoon for the conviction rate of journalists and was challenged over allegations of a "witch hunt" against the industry.

Phone-hacking was "rife" at all three of Mirror Group Newspaper's (MGN) national titles by mid-1999 at the latest, the High Court has heard.
The date when the practice first started at the Daily Mirror, Sunday Mirror and Sunday People was not known, counsel David Sherborne told a hearing to decide the amount of compensation to be awarded in eight representative claims.

The Metropolitan Police has admitted to using Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act to secretly obtain the phone records of three Sun journalists and the paper's newsdesk as part of its Plebgate investigation.